Atlas · for your life
Atlas is the operating system for your life.
Your household and your work, side by side. One place that actually knows you.
Founding members get in free during early access.
Get early access →Built by Kris Porter.
It all lived in my head.
Where my husband's next meeting was. Where my kid's permission slip went. Which client was waiting on what. What my team needed next. What we had in the freezer. Who was up for a school pickup tomorrow. Whose birthday was Thursday. What I owed in quarterly taxes. The login for the thing we use four times a year.
The apps that were supposed to help didn't talk to each other, or to me. So I held it all. And I was tired, but more than tired — I was the bottleneck. If I got hit by a bus, my entire family and business would have had to reverse-engineer me to keep going.
So I started building. Not a product — an architecture. The shape my life actually had. Household on one side, work on the other, sharing the things that should be shared and keeping separate the things that shouldn't.
What I didn't expect: it wasn't just for me. The travel advisors I'd been teaching needed it. The pastors and caregivers and parents in my life needed it. Everyone who'd been holding it all in their head needed somewhere to put it down.
So now it's a thing.
I built it because I had to. You can use it because I figured I shouldn't be the only one.
What Atlas is
The room your life runs from.
Atlas isn't trying to replace the tools you already use. Your calendar is fine. Your email is fine. What's broken is that none of them know about each other — or about you.
Atlas is the layer that sits across all of it. Your household roster and your client pipeline, on the same screen. Your goals and your invoices, in the same place. Your Google Calendar, your Gmail, your tasks — synced and surfaced alongside the things only you know.
Atlas doesn't store your email. Google does that better. Atlas shows you your email next to the client it's about, the project it belongs to, and the follow-up you haven't done yet.
Atlas doesn't try to be your calendar. Google Calendar does that better. Atlas shows you your day alongside your to-dos, your flows, your waiting-on list, and a morning brief that actually knows what's on your plate.
Atlas does the thing nobody else does: it holds the shape of your whole life in one place, so nothing falls through the cracks.
What's inside
Six rooms. Everything has a place.
DO — Your daily operating system. Flows and rhythms, calendar, to-dos, projects, waiting-on list, seasonal tasks. The stuff that keeps the wheels turning.
HOME — Your household. Family profiles, secure vault, house rules, agreements, legacy planning. The stuff that usually lives in a junk drawer or in someone's head.
WORK — Your business. CRM, client pipeline, invoicing, proposals, time tracking, mileage, mail room. The stuff that used to take three apps and a spreadsheet.
CONNECT — Your people. Community forum, events, direct messages, member directory. Find others in your guild by name, specialty, or region.
LEARN — Your growth. Resource library, courses, guided pathways. What your guild makes available to help you get better at what you do.
DISCOVER — Your marketplace. Directory, supplier network, member showcase. The professional ecosystem around you.
Find your shape
Pick what fits. Change it anytime.
Pricing goes live soon. Founding members get full access during early launch.
The AI thing
If you want it, it's extraordinary. If you don't, Atlas still works.
Let's be honest: some of you are going to love the AI part. Some of you are going to skip it entirely. Both are fine. Atlas works either way.
Without AI, Atlas is a beautifully organized place to manage your household and your work. You click, you type, you drag. Everything has a screen, a button, a form. Nothing is hidden behind a chat box.
With AI, Atlas becomes something else. You connect your own AI — Claude, ChatGPT, or Grok — and suddenly it can do things for you:
"Add a follow-up for Sarah next Tuesday."
"What did I spend on contractors this month?"
"Create a new project for the Johnson closing."
Your AI knows your Atlas — your contacts, your projects, your goals, your household — because Atlas gives it the architecture to work inside. You talk. It acts. Atlas is where the results land.
Not ready for AI? That's genuinely okay. We built Atlas so the app stands on its own. And when you're ready — if you ever are — the AI part is there, waiting. No pressure, no judgment, no tech guilt.
Already have an AI subscription? Connect it in settings. Takes about two minutes.
Don't have one? Atlas has a built-in assistant that handles the basics. A free-tier API key from any of the providers works fine for most people. We'll walk you through it if you want.
Claude · ChatGPT · Grok
Why we call them guilds
Communities of craft. Not corporations.
Before corporations, before org charts, there were guilds — communities of practitioners who shared a craft. Blacksmiths taught blacksmiths. Weavers taught weavers. Knowledge flowed between peers, not down from management.
We use the word intentionally. A guild isn't a company you work for — it's a community you belong to. Your guild is the people who do what you do, who understand the specific rhythms of your work without explanation. Travel agents have one. Funeral directors have another. Financial planners, real estate agents, coaches — each profession has its own guild inside Atlas.
Your guild shapes your vocabulary, your workflows, and your peer network. But it doesn't own your data, and it doesn't define your whole life. You're a person first, a guild member second. Atlas is built around that order.